h gD A I IYVol. LXXXVIII, No. 55-S 1 [~richganL)R LITuesdayAugustl1 1978 Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Sixteen Pages plus Supplement Hospital official killed after argument with co-worker By R. J. SMITH In a flurry of gunfire that evolved out of a heated argument between two co- workers in a University Hospital hallway, the assistant administrator for the Neuro-Psychiatric Institute (NPI) was shot five times yesterday morning. He died six hours later., Donald Koos, 30, was shot at ap- proximately 9:10 a.m. Arrested on charges of assault with intent to mur- der was William Aparacio, 47. Police say Aparcio will be arraigned today on charges of homicide. THE SHOOTING occurred in a wing of the Neuro-Psychiatric center, located on the main level of University Hospital on E. Ann. Outside their ad- jacent offices, the two men were heard arguing early yesterday morning. Ac- cording to police, Aparacio suddenly pulled out a gun and shot Koos three times in the head, once in the chest and once in the hip. After the shooting, as Koos lay bleeding and blood dripped from the spattered hospital walls, Aparacio walked to a secretary's desk and put down his gun. According to University security officers on the scene, Aparacio quietly waited at his desk until police arrived. Koos was rushed to an operating room and was later placed in an inten- sive care unit where he died at 3:24 p.m. REASONS FOR the dispute which prompted the shooting are cloudy. Hospital officials say they know of no friction between the two, who worked together as an administrative team, handling various fiscal and budget mat- ters for the center. Joseph Owsley, assistant director for the hospital's public information ser- vice, said NPI employees had been receiving job evaluations recently and speculated Aparacio may have received poor marks. Ann Arbor police theorized this evaluation may have played a part in the shooting. But Owsley said the two men had worked as equals, and Koos had no im- mediate authority to enable him to of- ficially evaluate Aparacio's work. "THEY'VE worked together for 14, 15 months, and they had to work together to coordinate their jobs," Owsley explained. Both Ann Arbor police and University security have theorized Aparicio was depressed by something Koos had done the previous week. A spokesman for the AP Photo FRENCH POLICE open fire during yesterday's shootout outside the Iraqi em- bassy in Paris. The shootout followed an eight and one-half hour ordeal during which an Arab terrorist held hostages inside the embassy. The terrorist surren- dered, but angry Iraqi Embassy guards fired on him and the police who were escorting him. Shotout s embassy seige PARIS (AP) - A lone terrorist Palestinian sources in Lebanon to be a surrendered yesterday after holding guerrilla loyal to Yasser Arafat, was nine hostages at the Iraqi Embassy for reported seriously wounded. 8% hours and touching off a wild and THE OTHER three wounded were bloody shootout between vengeful Iraqi identified as two police officers and an security men and French police who Arab League diplomat who had acted were trying to take him away. as a negotiator. An embassy guard suf- One policeman and one Iraqi guard fered serious gunshot wounds during were killed, and the terrorist and three the initial terrorist takeover of the other persons were wounded, police building. said. The Iraqis' action was "incom- POLICE SAID at least three Iraqi prehensible," said French Police security men first rushed the French Commissioner Marcel Leclerc, who officers and their captive on the street himself had to duck gunfire at the outside the embassy, opening fire on scene. the terrorist. The Frenchmen returned RELIABLE sources in the guerrilla the fire, police said. More than a dozen movement in Beirut said the embassy shots were heard during the brief,, raid was part of an anti-Iraq campaign bizarre battle. being waged by Arafat's Fatah A number of Iraqi security guards guerrilla group because of Iraq's sup- were arrestedby French police. port of radical guerrillas fighting n- The captured rterrorit,; said by See TERRORIST, Page 12 Koos Department of Safety, which heads University security, speculated Aparicio had never meant to fire the gun, only "intending to scare him." Koos had been the center's assistant administrator since 1977. From 1969 to early last year, he had worked with the University's medical center coor- dinating personnel. Koos was married and has adaughter. APARACIO HAS also been with the University since 1969, working in SeeNPI,Page2 Sadat's peace efforts 'disappoint' Vance.,. WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Cyrus Vance will travel to the Mideast this week on a mediating nilssion, despite being "very disappoin- ted" in the latest statement by Egyp- tian President Anwar Sadat. The State Department, responding yesterday to Sadat's announcement that Egypt would not negotiate until Israel agrees to give back all Arab land captured in 1967, was harsher in its criticism of Sadat than at any time sin- ce his visit to Jerusalem last year. "WE ARE very disappointed" in Sadat's position, said spokesian Hod.- ding CArte N'onetheless', he Vdded, Vance will leave Friday or Saturday for -Jerusalem and Cairo to talk with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and with Sadat. In Tel Aviv, an Israeli government spokesman said that Begin expressed "satisfaction" with the U.S. criticism and that Sadat's recent statement "proves that the obstacle to peace is the unreasonable extremism reigning in Egypt." "It took several months for the truth to begin to come clear," Begin was quoted as saying. "Nations and gover- nments were misled by the false propaganda that Egypt desired peace and Israel caused it to~fail." See VANCE,1Page12